Personalfrom Herbert W. Armstrong

Some of the teachings in the Bible are a little hard for the average thinking mind
to understand.

James tells us to count it all joy when trials, ordeals, reverses beset us. Troubles
a joy? That’s pretty hard to accept, isn’t it? And, for the average person, a lot
harder to put into practice.

Few find any pleasure, let alone joy, in the obstacles and troubles they encounter.
Yet this biblical teaching says we ought so to count them. There is a reason, although
few understand it.

In one of the Psalms you’ll read that the righteous are going to have to bear many afflictions. But, it promises, the Eternal will deliver us out of them all – if we
believe and trust Him!

Again, it is through much tribulation that we must enter the Kingdom of God. Why?
There’s a reason!

Now consider another biblical teaching hard for some to understand.

About a year ago I wrote an article, now available in booklet form, What Do You Mean – Born Again? In the fifth chapter of Ephesians you find a husband-wife relationship pictured as
corresponding to Christ and the Church. Scriptural teaching assures us that, at His
coming, Christ is going to marry the Church. Also, the Scriptures teach that the Church will, at His coming, be born of God, by a resurrection of all who have died, and the instantaneous conversion
from mortal to immortal of those then living (I Cor. 15:50-53).

So one man reasons: Could a full-grown man marry an infant girl baby, just born? If
those in the Church are to be just then born of God, how can they marry Christ before
they grow up?

This, too, seems difficult for some to comprehend. Yet the answer to James’ teaching
– the understanding of what James really means – is also the answer to this seeming
inconsistency.

There is a third seeming inconsistency, hard for some to understand. About a year
and a half ago in this column I explained how, contrary to the thinking of many, a
Christian may – and too often does – actually commit sin after he is converted. He should not, of course. But too often he does, and yet he still remains a Christian. The true
explanation of James’ teaching, first mentioned above, is also the explanation of
this experience.

So let’s understand!

Why were we born in the first place? What is the real purpose of human life? God Almighty
the Creator is reproducing Himself! As truly as we mortal humans have been given power
to reproduce ourselves – to bring forth progeny in our own image, born with our very
nature – even so the Great God is bringing forth sons in His image, born with His
very divine nature!

The very purpose of our existence is that we be begotten as God’s children, and become
born of Him.

And human reproduction is the very type of spiritual reproduction. What God created
at the time described in the first chapter of Genesis was a physical creation. You’ll
find nothing spiritual there. In physical man, made of the dust of the ground, God
created the material with which He may mold, shape, form, and create the spiritual
being. He pictures us as the clay, Himself as the Potter – forming us into the spiritual
image of His designing.

Now human reproduction, I say, pictures spiritual reproduction. Each human, since
Adam and Eve, started from a tiny egg, called an ovum, the size of a pinpoint. It
was produced in the body of the mother. The egg is incomplete, of itself. It has a
life of only about 48 hours, according to some authorities. Unless fertilized by the
life-giving sperm cell from the human father within that limited lifetime, it dies.

Each human, spiritually speaking, is like an egg. The average human lifetime is said
to be 70 years. Adam was created incomplete, and each of us was born incomplete –
that is, we were made to need the Holy Spirit of God. And unless, within our limited
lifespan of some 70 years, we are begotten of God – by His Spirit which is His immortal divine LIFE, entering to impart eternal life to us – we shall die – and that shall be the
end – except that God has appointed a resurrection of all who have lived, and, for
those who reject His gift of eternal life, the final second death in the lake of fire.

But, in the case of the human ovum, once fertilized as a begotten human, the egg –
now called an embryo – is kept within the body of the mother, and is nourished and
fed material food through her and protected by her. And there it must grow, being
fed physically through the mother, large enough to be born. After a number of weeks,
the embryo is called a fetus, and at birth it is a human baby.

In like manner, the Bible calls the Church the “mother of us all.” That is, the mother
of Christians – those begotten of God. It is the function of the Church to protect
and feed, spiritually, on the spiritual food of God’s Word, those begotten children
of God, so that we may grow spiritually, in the divine character, ready to be born.

Surely this is a wonderful comparison. Yet types and antitypes are not always alike
in every detail.

When a physical baby is born, it is not ready for marriage. When the spiritual child
of God is born he will be fully mature for the spiritual marriage. How can this be?
This is what one thinking man could not see.

The unborn human fetus is only growing physically. At birth the human baby knows nothing.
He is helpless. He must be taught. He must learn. He is born merely with a mind capable of learning, knowing, thinking. He is not yet of mature size physically or mentally.
Many do marry who are still entirely immature spiritually and/or emotionally. But
we do assume that one has reasonable maturity physically and mentally before marriage.
In the human, this development takes place in the human state after the human birth.

Therefore, the human baby is not ready for marriage at birth.

But the spirit-born are different!

Just as the fertilized ovum – the embryo which becomes the fetus – must grow physically
from material food, so the Spirit-begotten child of God must grow spiritually before
he can be born. But there is a difference!

The fetus does not attain to complete physical maturity before birth, and has no mental
maturity. But, in the spiritual rebirth, one must attain reasonable spiritual maturity
before he is spirit-born.

Now what is spiritual growth? Just as the physical embryo-fetus must grow physically
large enough to be born, so the Spirit-begotten Christian must grow spiritually or
he will never be born of God. But spiritual growth is CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT.

The Spirit-begotten starts out with a MIND from the beginning. God is perfect character – divine, spiritual character. God is also love. And perfect spiritual
character is the way of love! Such character is the attainment of the ability, in
a separate independent entity of free moral agency, to be able to discern right from
wrong – the true values from the false – truth from error – the right way from the
wrong, and then to make the right choice or decision, even against self-desire, impulse
or temptation; plus the will and self-discipline to resist the wrong and to do the
right.

No human, with human nature, has the power – alone by himself – to do this. But God
has made available the spiritual power and help man lacks. Man must desire to know
– must hunger and thirst for truth; man must make his own decision, exercise his own
will, even against the pulls of his nature. But without the help of God – without
spiritual power from God – man is utterly unable.

That is why truly converted Christians sometimes actually do sin. They are like the
apostle Paul, as he describes himself in Romans 7. With his mind he wanted to go the
way of Gods law, yet he found himself unable. Another law warred within him against
the good resolutions of his mind. But the sequel to Romans 7 is Romans 8 – the Holy
Spirit chapter. Who, Paul cried out, could save him from this body of death he struggled
against in vain? The answer is, God, through His Holy Spirit.

A true Christian doesn’t want to sin – should not. But sometimes he finds himself
caught in the vise of habit, or overwhelmed by temptation or by circumstances from
which he is unable to free himself. Surely, had such a one been continually praying,
keeping himself close to God, and detached from the world or its lures or the temptations
of the flesh, he probably would have had sufficient divine help to have prevented
the sinning. But only Jesus Christ ever did keep that close to God!

God looks on the heart. In such a case, the Christian does not sin maliciously, with
malice aforethought. He is merely caught in the vortex of a temptation which sucks
him helplessly down into the sin. Then he is terribly sorry. He is disgusted with
himself. He repents. He goes to work to overcome. He may not succeed, due to human
weakness, at once. But he remains determined and finally does, with God’s help, overcome
completely. Many a true Christian has had such a struggle over a particular human
weakness and temptation, and after even several setbacks, finally, through God’s power,
won the victory and fought his way free.

God looks on the heart. God forgives in such cases. The living Christ, our High Priest,
has compassion, is filled with mercy – as long as the attitude is right, the desire of the inner man is to conquer the flesh and overcome the temptation and be free
from it entirely. In the end, it is God who gives the victory. But, in such a struggle,
the Christian develops character.

Now character, I have said many times, is something God does not create automatically.
It is developed through experience. The development of that character is the very
purpose of our being alive. Also the development of that character, unlike the purely
physical growth of the unborn baby, actually is growing toward spiritual maturity,
right now in the begettal stage prior to spirit birth – in this present mortal human
life.

Notice how the “mother of us all,” the Church, is to protect and feed those in it,
until they reach spiritual maturity. In I Corinthians 12 you’ll read how God gives
spiritual gifts for various administrations, or functions of service. In Ephesians
4:11-14, Christ has given special spiritual abilities or talents to certain ones in
a chain of authority under Him in the Church – and notice for what purpose:

“And his [Christ’s] gifts were that some should be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists,
some pastors and teachers, for the equipment of the saints, for the work of ministry,
for building up the body of Christ [the Church], UNTIL we all attain to the unity
of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ” (RSV).

In other words, to full spiritual maturity!

Now why should we count the troubles and problems and temptations that beset us as
all joy?

Simply because we cannot hurdle these obstacles successfully in our own power. They
drive us to seek help from God. To go to God for the wisdom to know what to do, and
the power to be able to do it, requires faith. This is a living faith. It is alive.
It is active.

When we meet such trials, we often do not know what to do. We lack the wisdom to make
the right decision. So open your Bible to the first chapter of James. Notice verse
5.

If you lack wisdom, in such trials, go to God for it! But ask in faith – no wavering
– no doubting. Be sure God will not fail, but will give you this wisdom. Depend upon
Him for it. If you waver, you are like a wave in the ocean – tossed back and forth
– going nowhere! So, instead of wavering, be steadfast. And if you don’t get the answer
immediately from God, have patience. Don’t give up. Trust Him.

Now notice verses 2-3: “Count it all joy, my brethren, when you meet various trials,
for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness” (Revised Standard
Version). These trials force you to your knees. You must have faith to meet them.
They test your faith. They develop spiritual character!

In the King James Version, it says the trying of your faith produces patience. It
produces that kind of patience that is steadfastness. That is character!

Sure, it may be unpleasant for a while. But, Paul assures us that if we suffer with
Christ, we shall reign with Him – and the glory to be revealed in us is so incomparably
greater than anything we now are, that this promised future for eternity is something
to rejoice over!

Yes, count it all joy! Even if unpleasant. It is maturing you, now, for the marriage
to Christ. The Church of God shall be born into the Kingdom of God! The Kingdom of
God will not be composed of spiritual know-nothings and infants.

When we are born again – born of God – resurrected in spirit bodies, those bodies
will not be small, like a human physical infant which must grow to full physical size.
We shall look as we do now, so far as form and shape and features are concerned. But
the resurrected body will be a different body – composed of spirit instead of flesh
and blood (I Cor. 15:35-44).

The original twelve apostles were Christ’s witnesses. That is, they were actual eyewitnesses
that Jesus rose from the dead – that the living resurrected Christ was the same Jesus
who had been crucified. They were with Him forty days after His resurrection. But
nobody will be foolish enough to suggest that when Christ was born very Son of God
by the resurrection (Romans 1:4) that He was resurrected in a tiny infant’s body composed
of spirit. He was resurrected full grown, as He had been when crucified. How did the
apostles know He was the same Jesus? Because they knew what Jesus had looked like
– and in His born-again, resurrected body He looked the same, except He now was composed
of spirit instead of matter!

The resurrected Christ was perfect – He was very God! But He did not grow up into
perfection after He was resurrected. It was during His human lifetime, setting us
the example, that He was made perfect, as you read in Hebrews 2:10 and 5:8-9.

Thus it is plain that we must develop spiritual character, growing to spiritual adulthood,
during this life – not after our resurrection in glory! This is the spiritual growth,
of which the physical growth of the unborn child, from tiny embryo to a size and weight
of some six to eight pounds at birth, is a type. The physical growth of the unborn
human is a growth of physical size and weight. The spiritual growth of the begotten
but yet unborn spiritual child of God is a growth in spiritual character, not of physical
volume, size or weight. The human baby merely grows large enough to be born prior
to birth – not to physical or mental maturity. But he does grow. And this physical
growth is the type of the spiritual growth by feeding on the Word of God, and prayer,
and Christian fellowship, and participation in the Work of God in the life of the
begotten child of God.

The difference is merely the difference between matter and spirit. One is a material
growth. Material growth is measured by volume, size, weight. The other is spiritual
growth, measured by character development.

Jesus was born very Son of God by His resurrection (Romans 1:4). He was born fully
mature. He was born in a spirit body, which was manifested to His apostles in the
same apparent size and shape as when He died. When He appears on earth the second
time, in His spirit glorified body, we shall be resurrected, or instantaneously changed,
to a body that will be like Him (I John 3:2) – full grown–adult!